The Following was
sent to me via
email.
Unfortunately, no
contact names were
given for this. It
did such a good
job of
personalizing the
Iwo Jima incident.
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IWO JIMA
MEMORIAL |
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James Bradley
just happened to
be in Washington,
DC, to speak at
the memorial the
following day. He
was there that
night to say good
night to his dad,
who has since
passed away. He
was just about to
leave when he saw
the buses pull up.
I videotaped him
as he spoke to us,
and received his
permission to
share what he said
from my videotape.
It is one thing to
tour the
incredible
monuments filled
with history in
Washington, D.C.,
but it is quite
another to get the
kind of insight we
received that
night. When all
had gathered
around he
reverently began
to speak.
Here are his words
that night:
"My name is James
Bradley and I'm
from Antigo,
Wisconsin. My dad
is on that statue,
and I just wrote a
book called "Flags
of Our Fathers"
which is #5 on the
New York Times
Best Seller list
right now. It is
the story of the
six boys you see
behind me. Six
boys raised the
flag. The first
guy putting the
pole in the ground
is Harlon Block.
Harlon was an
all-state football
player.
He enlisted in the
Marine Corps with
all the senior
members of his
football team.
They were off to
play another type
of game. A game
called "War."
But it didn't turn
out to be a game.
Harlon, at the age
of 21, died with
his intestines in
his hands. I don't
say that to gross
you out, I say
that because there
are generals who
stand in front of
this statue and
talk about the
glory of war. You
guys need to know
that most of the
boys in Iwo Jima
were 17, 18, and
19 years old.
(He pointed to the
statue) You see
this next guy?
That's Rene Gagnon
from New
Hampshire. If you
took Rene's helmet
off at the moment
this photo was
taken, and looked
in the webbing of
that helmet, you
would find a
photograph---a
photograph of his
girlfriend. Rene
put that in there
for protection,
because he was
scared. He was 18
years old. Boys
won the battle of
Iwo Jima. Boys.
Not old men.
The next guy here,
the third guy in
this tableau, was
Sergeant Mike
Strank. Mike is my
hero. He was the
hero of all these
guys. They called
him the "old man"
because he was so
old. He was
already 24. When
Mike would
motivate his boys
in training camp,
he didn't say,
"Let's go kill
some Japanese" or
"Let's die for our
country." He knew
he was talking to
little boys.
Instead he would
say, "You do what
I say, and I'll
get you home to
your mothers."
The last guy on
this side of the
statue is Ira
Hayes, a Pima
Indian from
Arizona. Ira Hayes
walked off Iwo
Jima. He went
into the White
House with my dad.
President Truman
told him, "You're
a hero." He told
reporters, "How
can I feel like a
hero when 250 of
my buddies hit the
island with me and
only 27 of us
walked off
alive?" So you
take your class at
school, 250 of you
spending a year
together having
fun, doing
everything
together. Then all
250 of you hit
the beach, but
only 27 of your
classmates walk
off alive. That
was Ira Hayes. He
had images of
horror in his
mind. Ira Hayes
died dead drunk,
face down at the
age of 32...ten
years after this
picture was taken.
The next guy,
going around the
statue, is
Franklin Sousley
from Hilltop
Kentucky. A fun-lovin'
hillbilly boy. His
best friend, who
is now 70, told
me, "Yeah, you
know, we took two
cows up on the
porch of the
Hilltop General
Store. Then we
strung wire across
the stairs so the
cows couldn't get
down. Then we fed
them Epsom salts.
Those cows crapped
all night." Yes he
was a fun-lovin'
hillbilly boy.
Franklin died on
Iwo Jima at the
age of 19. When
the telegram came
to tell his mother
that he was dead,
it went to the
Hilltop General
Store. A barefoot
boy ran that
telegram up to his
mother's farm. The
neighbors could
hear her scream
all night and into
the morning. The
neighbors lived a
quarter of a mile
away.
The next guy, as
we continue to go
around the statue
is my dad, John
Bradley from
Antigo, Wisconsin,
where I was
raised. My dad
lived until 1994,
but he would never
give interviews.
When Walter
Cronkite's
producers, or the
New York Times
would call, we
were trained as
little kids to
say, "No, I'm
sorry sir, my
dad's not here. He
is in Canada
fishing. No, there
is no phone there,
sir. No, we don't
know when he is
coming back."
My dad never
fished or even
went to Canada.
Usually, he was
sitting there
right at the table
eating his
Campbell's soup.
But we had to tell
the press that he
was out fishing.
He didn't want to
talk to the press.
You see, my dad
didn't see himself
as a hero.
Everyone thinks
these guys are
heroes, 'cause
they are in a
photo and a
monument. My dad
knew better. He
was a medic. John
Bradley from
Wisconsin was a
caregiver. In Iwo
Jima he probably
held over 200 boys
as they died. And
when boys died in
Iwo Jima, they
writhed and
screamed in pain.
When I was a
little boy, my
third grade
teacher told me
that my dad was a
hero. When I went
home and told my
dad that, he
looked at me and
said, "I want you
always to remember
that the heroes of
Iwo Jima are the
guys who did not
come back. Did NOT
come back."
So that's the
story about six
nice young boys.
Three died on Iwo
Jima, and three
came back as
national heroes.
Overall 7000 boys
died on Iwo Jima
in the worst
battle in the
history of the
Marine Corps. My
voice is giving
out, so I will end
here. Thank you
for your time."
Suddenly, the
monument wasn't
just a big old
piece of metal
with a flag
sticking out of
the top. It came
to life before our
eyes with the
heartfelt words of
a son who did
indeed have a
father who was a
hero. Maybe not a
hero for the
reasons most
people would
believe, but a
hero
none-the-less.
We need to
remember that God
created this vast
and glorious world
for us to live in,
freely, but also
at great
sacrifice. Let us
never forget from
the revolutionary
War to the Gulf
War and all the
wars in-between
that sacrifice was
made for our
freedom.
Remember to pray
praises for this
great country of
ours and also pray
for those still in
murderous unrest
around the world.
STOP, and thank
God for being
alive at someone
else's sacrifice.
God Bless
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